About the Book
Twelve-year-old Sarojini’s best friend, Amir, might not be her best friend any more. Ever since Amir moved out of the basti and started going to a posh private school, it seems like he and Sarojini have nothing in common.
Then Sarojini finds out about the Right to Education, a law that might help her get a free seat at Amir’s school - or, better yet, convince him to come back to a new and improved version of the government school they went to together.
As she struggles to keep her best friend, Sarojini gets help from some unexpected characters, including Deepti, a feisty classmate who lives at a construction site; Vimala Madam, a human rights lawyer who might also be an evil genius; and Mrs. Sarojini Naidu, a long-dead freedom fighter who becomes Sarojini’s secret pen pal. Told through letters to Mrs. Naidu, this is the story of how Sarojini learns to fight - for her friendship, her family, and her future.
Dear Mrs. Naidu
Mathangi Subramanian is a writer, educator, and activist who believes that stories have the power to change the world. A former American public school teacher, assistant vice president at Sesame Workshop and senior policy analyst at the New York City Council, she has received numerous awards, including a Fulbright-Nehru Fellowship, a Teachers College Office of Policy and Research Fellowship and a Jacob Javits Fellowship. Her nonfiction has appeared in publications such as The Hindu Sunday Magazine, Quartz, Al Jazeera America, Feministing and the Seal Press anthology Click!: When We Knew We Were Feminists. Her fiction has appeared in Kahani, Skipping Stones and The Hindu’s Young World. Dear Mrs. Naidu is her first novel.
YOUNG ZUBAAN
an imprint of Zubaan Publishers Pvt Ltd
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Email: [email protected]
Website: www.zubaanbooks.com
First published by Zubaan 2015
Copyright © Mathangi Subramanian, 2015
All rights reserved
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eBook ISBN: 9789384757175
Print source ISBN: 9789383074983
This eBook is DRM-free.
Zubaan is an independent feminist publishing house based in New Delhi with a strong academic and general list. It was set up as an imprint of India’s first feminist publishing house, Kali for Women, and carries forward Kali’s tradition of publishing world quality books to high editorial and production standards. Zubaan means tongue, voice, language, speech in Hindustani. Zubaan is a non-profit publisher, working in the areas of the humanities, social sciences, as well as in fiction, general non-fiction, and books for children and young adults under its Young Zubaan imprint.
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Contents
Cover
About the Book
About the Author
Title Page
Copyright
Note to the Reader
Dedication
Quote
Dear Mrs. Naidu
About Mrs. Sarojini Naidu
Organizations Working for Child Rights
Acknowledgements
For
A. Kumaraswamy and P.K. Swarnambal
(Better known as Thatha Patti)
“Do not think of yourselves as small girls. You are the powerful Durgas in disguise…. Forget about the earth. You shall move the skies.”
– Sarojini Naidu, 1930
June 10, 2013
Dear Mrs. Naidu,
I guess you’re wondering why I’m writing you this letter.
Honestly, Mrs. Naidu, so am I.
Amma says I’m not allowed to speak to strangers. You would think that also meant that I shouldn’t write to them. But since this is a school assignment, she says it’s okay.
(Here is a tip, Mrs. Naidu: if you ever want adults to let you do something, just tell them it is a school assignment. They will one hundred percent agree to it every time.)
Maybe I should start from the beginning.
The beginning was last week.
Last week I started Class Six and I met our new teacher, Annie Miss, who is not like any teacher I have had before.
For example: Annie Miss says she doesn’t think school should be about memorizing things and saying them back. She says memorizing things and saying them back makes you a parrot, not a person. She says she wants us to grow our brains and our hearts.
When she said that, I wanted to ask how growing our hearts will help us pass our exams and get into college and get a job and buy a house with a proper roof and maybe even a garden, which are all the reasons why I go to school. But I didn’t.
You know how adults are, Mrs. Naidu. They don’t like questions.
Even though it was only the first week of school, Miss gave us an assignment. (Miss says that now we are in sixth standard, it is time for us to be serious. Every teacher says this every year. But none of them ever gave us assignments during the first week of school, so Annie Miss might mean it.)
The assignment is to write letters to someone we would like to get to know better. She said that we could pick anyone, as long as we explain why.
As you have probably concluded, Mrs. Naidu, I picked you.
(This is the first time I have said written the word “concluded.” It’s an English word that means “figured out based on clues and evidence.” I learned it by reading detective stories, even though our English Miss says they are useless rags. I think this proves I conclude that she is wrong.)
I understand if you find this confusing, Mrs. Naidu. After all, you and I don’t have much in common. For one thing, I am alive and you are – well, you are not.
(I’m sorry if that was rude, but I’ve never written to a dead deceased passed on historical person before, so I don’t really know the polite way to say that you are dead it.)
Here’s another difference between us. When you were twelve – which is how old I am now – you wrote a poem that was thousands of lines long. And it was in English.
I don’t think I could write that many lines in any language. Definitely not in English.
Also, when you were twelve, you topped the Madras University matriculation exam.
I topped our Class Five exams, but I don’t think I could top a college exam, even if I studied really, really hard.
You fought for India’s freedom and won.
I’ve never fought for anything. If I did, I’m not sure if I would win. Especially if I was fighting against the Britishers, who have lots of spies and detectives and things that I don’t think we have in India.
You lived in a huge house with a lot of rooms and maids to do your housework.
My house has only one room, and Amma is a maid who does other people’s housework.
You had a lot of brothers and sisters and then you had a lot of kids.
I don’t have any brothers and sisters. (I don’t have kids either, but you probably know concluded that already, since I’m only twelve.)
H
ere is why I decided to write to you: I’m reading a book about your life. Vimala Madam gave it to me – or, she gave it to Amma to give to me.
I haven’t read all of it yet – it’s in English, but much more complicated English than the kind they use in detective stories, so it’s taking me some time. So far, I’ve only read the part about your childhood. But that part makes me like you.
When you were my age, or even younger, Mrs. Naidu, it seems like you stood up to parents and teachers and all the adults who don’t understand anything at all, but act like they do. For example, the book says that your parents wanted you to speak English instead of Bengali. It says you locked yourself in a room for a whole day because you disagreed with them. You didn’t even come down for lunch.
I don’t know if this is true or just a story, but if I had a house with more than one room, there are plenty of times I would’ve locked myself behind a closed door.
I guess that’s why you seem like someone who understands kids like me. Like maybe you wouldn’t mind if I asked you questions and read detective stories and stayed at school late so I didn’t have to go to Vimala Madam’s house.
And now I have completed my first assignment, which is to introduce myself to the person that I am writing to.
To be completely honest, my brain and my heart feel exactly the same as when I started.
All the best,
Sarojini
P.S. This reminds me of something we do have in common – we have the same first name.
June 14, 2013
Dear Mrs. Naidu,
Our next assignment is to write about someone who is important to our lives.
For me, that’s easy. The most important person in my life is Amma.
Mrs. Naidu, I may not have much in common with you, but Amma definitely does. Amma is a fighter, and she loves words. She hasn’t written poems that have been published in books, like yours, and she hasn’t fought for anything as serious as getting the Britishers out of India. But when someone needs help or is not being treated fairly, Amma always steps in, and she always finds the right words.
Like, for example, Amma found the right words to get a water truck to come every day when the tap in our area stopped working. She found the right words to get the bank to let Amma and Tasmiah Aunty open bank accounts without their husbands having to sign for them. She found the right words to get the school to enroll Roshan even though his Amma, Hema Aunty, didn’t have his birth certificate. And then she found the right words to get Roshan a birth certificate so he wouldn’t have that problem ever again.
Sometimes Amma makes things right without even using words. Like when we’re on the bus and a man says something he shouldn’t be saying or touches something he shouldn’t be touching, Amma gives him this look. It’s like she has laser beams coming out of her eyes.
(I read about laser beams in a comic book about an evil genius who wants to take over the world. Laser beams are like long pieces of light that are sharp on the edges. I know that when you were alive during your time you’ve probably never seen them, so you might not be able to picture what I’m talking about. But trust me, you don’t want to get caught at the end of a laser beam. Especially when that laser beam comes from Amma’s eyes.)
When Amma looks at you, it doesn’t matter how strong or important or confident you are. You stop doing what you’re doing. Sometimes you even apologize.
Amma knows what to say during a fight. But she also knows what to say after one. Like once, Amir and I were playing outside, and some boys came up to us and started calling Amir names and telling him he shouldn’t play with me. They said that Muslim boys like Amir who like to play with Hindu girls like me should leave India.
(Actually, they didn’t say ‘leave India.’ They said something much worse.)
(But I don’t want to write that here, Mrs. Naidu. Partly because I don’t want to offend you, and partly because I don’t want to remember.)
Amir and I came inside, and we were both crying. Amma was squeezing tamarind for sambar. When she hugged us, the palms of her hands were sticky and damp.
She said to Amir, “Sarojini and I will always love you. Wherever we are, that’s where you belong.”
Amir wiped his face and even smiled. I don’t know how Amma knew that was the right thing to say, but it was. Amir and I felt cozy and safe the rest of the night, even though those boys were outside doing all kinds of things that you would not approve of, Mrs. Naidu.
So like I was saying, Amma always finds the right words.
Well, not always.
There was one time when she didn’t find the right words. And it changed both of our lives forever, even though my life hadn’t even started yet.
Amma grew up on a farm. When she talks about it, it sounds magical and perfect, like one of your poems.
(Mrs. Naidu, I don’t completely understand all your poems. But I like the way they sound when I say them out loud. Do you think that it’s okay to like things that you don’t understand?)
I wish I could visit the farm. Amma says that at night, it would be hard to sleep because the frogs and the crickets kept croaking and chirping. She says after it rained, the sky would be so blue and the earth so green that it hurt your eyes. She says that after school, she and her sisters used to climb the gooseberry trees and shake the branches until all the fruit came down, or until they got caught by their older cousins who said climbing trees was unladylike.
I wish we could go visit. I wish I could hear the frogs and the crickets and feel the tree branches scratch the bottoms of my feet and maybe even taste some gooseberries.
But Amma can’t go back. And she can’t take me.
Because Amma married Appa.
That’s another thing you and Amma have in common, Mrs. Naidu: you both had love marriages. You both met your husbands when you were teenagers. You both wanted to marry men who were from different castes.
Your story is different from Amma’s though. I read that when you were fifteen, your Appa sent you to England to study, to keep you from getting married.
(No offense, Mrs. Naidu, but if I thought Amma would send me to the UK to keep me away from a boy, I would pretend to be in love with Amir just so I could go.)
Eventually, though, your Appa said it was fine. I guess he had to, because he helped pass the law that made it okay to marry someone from another caste, and if he was letting everyone else in India do it he had to let you do it too. But then I think that he also probably said yes because he loved you and wanted you to be happy.
(I’m actually still at the part where you’re studying in England, but I skipped ahead a little bit just to see what happened.)
It seems to me, Mrs. Naidu, that you fought for your marriage and you won. You found the right words, and then you and your husband lived happily ever after.
Amma fought for her marriage too. But she didn’t find the right words. She didn’t win. And she and Appa didn’t live happily ever after.
Amma married Appa. Then Amma’s sisters and her Amma and her Appa and her cousins and her uncles and her aunts and everybody she knew stopped talking to her. So she and Appa decided to leave the village, because even the frogs and the crickets weren’t loud enough to drown out the silence.
So Amma and Appa moved to Bangalore. Then, when I was two years old, Appa left. I’m pretty sure he’s still alive, because Amma still wears her thali. Sometimes I think he might have started another family, probably with a lot of sons.
Amma never talks about him. And I don’t ask.
Well, I did ask, once. Sort of. I asked Amma if she wishes she had stayed on the farm, with the gooseberries and the frogs and the sisters. She told me, “If I had stayed, I wouldn’t have you.”
If you notice, Mrs. Naidu, this didn’t actually answer the question.
All the best,
Sarojini
June 18, 2013
Dear Mr
s. Naidu,
My next assignment is to talk about where I am from. I guess I should tell you about my neighbourhood.
Mrs. Naidu, I know you grew up in Hyderabad, which is the biggest city in Andhra Pradesh, and also the capital. I live in Bangalore, also known as Bengaluru, which is the biggest city in Karnataka, and also the capital. I know that you loved love your city even though it might be noisy and crowded and polluted and sometimes a little bit backwards. That makes me think that you understand that even though a place can have a lot of problems, it can still be home.
Just like you love your home, I love mine.
This may sound funny because most people see my home and hold their noses or shake their heads or get really angry for a second.
Well, not most people. Most people don’t notice my home, even when they stand right in front of it.
My home is in a coconut grove that’s squished between a brand new hospital and a shopping mall full of western stores. Amma says that if it wasn’t for all the trees, someone would have come and bulldozed it a long time ago and built another shopping mall. When I said that it doesn’t make sense to build a new shopping mall next to an old one, she said that in Bangalore, you can never have too many shopping malls.
(I know, Mrs. Naidu. I don’t understand either.)
Most of the time, I love my home and I love my neighbourhood. But the rest of the time, I wish I could run away to a house like yours, a house so comfortable and humongous and posh that you called it the Golden Threshold, which is also the name of your first book of poems.
Dear Mrs. Naidu Page 1